Blinded by Self-Interest

FeatureMon 05 Jan 2009 • Responses: 1 • by Fred Harburg

Integrity—A Jewel of Great Price

Senior Fellow Fred Harburg asks whether P. T. Barnum was right. Are we all just suckers? Are we so passive, impotent, and naïve that we will stand by and let those with powerful positions and strong force of personality lie, steal, and cheat innocent people out of their retirement accounts, their life savings, their jobs, and their future?

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Obama’s Challenges Overseas

a columnTue 23 Dec 2008 • Responses: 0 • by David Aikman

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It’s likely that historians will view the 2008 election as a moment when America turned inward and looked hard at what was going on inside the country. Many recently-elected presidents have taken office with a decidedly strong pre-occupation with foreign affairs: Richard Nixon was one, and George H. W. Bush another. Both men, incidentally, accomplished major things in foreign affairs but were tripped up by American domestic developments.

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Secrets Buried in Platitudes

Mon 15 Dec 2008 • Responses: 0 • by Peter Edman

An Advent reflection.

lighted plastic creche

Preparing recently for Advent and Christmas, I was thinking about how much I enjoy running across a good quotation. It’s always gratifying to find someone who can express themselves in a pithy or memorable manner, particularly if they can in the process help us look at the world in a fresh way. Four quotations from the past year stood out for me particularly.

One is from an interview the novelist Walker Percy did toward the end of his life, collected in the book Signposts in a Strange Land. He was asked the secret of the success of his marriage. His answer helps us see something about the world:

There is no secret. Or rather, the secrets are buried in platitudes. That is to say, it has something to do with love, commitment, and family.

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Manger Wetter

FeatureMon 15 Dec 2008 • Responses: 2 • by Dan Russ

Coming to Terms with Our Neediness

In this excerpt from his book, Flesh-and-Blood Jesus, Senior Fellow Dan Russ helps us reflect on the scandal and the joy of the birth and humanity of Jesus.

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Aitken on McDonald in the American Spectator

Mon 15 Dec 2008 • Responses: 0 • by TTF Staff

Trinity Forum Europe director Jonathan Aitken has written an article on the new philanthropic initiatives of Trinity Forum Founding Chairman Alonzo L. McDonald. “When the Giving Gets Rough” appears in the December 2008-January 2009 issue of the American Spectator.

One such counter-cyclical nonprofit is the McDonald Agape Foundation (MAF), which is expanding its support for Christian scholars, professorial chairs, and education programs in leading universities such as Harvard, Yale, Duke, and Emory. This fall MAF opened its latest benefaction at Oxford--the McDonald Center for Theology, Ethics and Public Life. I predict it will make a ground breaking impact far beyond the dreaming spires of my alma mater.

Where No One Sees

FeatureTue 09 Dec 2008 • Responses: 1 • by Sir Richard Dannatt

Character and Leadership in an Age of Image

An address by General Sir Richard Dannatt, KCB CBE MC ADC Gen, at an event at Rhodes House, Oxford, sponsored by the Trinity Forum Europe. 

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A Teaching Moment

FeatureMon 08 Dec 2008 • Responses: 1 • by Al Sikes

A framework of calling and character

Trinity Forum Chairman Al Sikes looks at the current economic crisis as an opportunity to reanimate the timeless wisdom of Solomon for our culture.

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Let all mortal flesh keep silence

Thu 04 Dec 2008 • Responses: 2 • by TTF Staff

If there never be a silence in the soul, and a man goes on always with his own thoughts and schemes and endeavours, it brings about a moral and spiritual madness. That is tenfold worse than mere madness in the brain, when a man judges everything by false ways, puts a wrong value on everything, thinks little of great things and much of little things—that is a common way with all of us more or less, only, thank God, with some of us it is growing less.

There comes a silence every now and then; and God makes it just to put a stop to this kind of thing, and give himself a chance of speaking.

Excerpted from George MacDonald’s sermon “Alone with God,” preached in Westminster Chapel, London; transcribed for the publication The Christian World Pulpit, reprinted in George MacDonald, ed. William J Peterson, Proving the Unseen (Ballantine Books, 1989). Thanks to the George MacDonald e-mail list.

Odysseus and the Seduction of Leadership

FeatureWed 03 Dec 2008 • Responses: 1 • by Paul Vanderbroeck

photo by Litmuse (flickr), CC license

What should drive your choices?

Executive coach Paul Vanderbroek takes another look at Odysseus. Together the Iliad and the Odyssey tell us a story of a young high-potential leader who let himself be seduced into leaving wife and family to embark on what seemed to be a noble project . . .

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Loconte on Niebuhr in Books & Culture

Mon 01 Dec 2008 • Responses: 0 • by TTF Staff

Senior Fellow Joseph Loconte has a review essay in the November/December 2008 issue of Books and Culture on the new edition of Reinhold Niebuhr’s The Irony of American History. “The Irony of American Politics”:

Nevertheless, many Niebuhr admirers have a disposition that blunts much of his message. They have fastened onto his critique of America's national foibles and used it like an axe to dismember U.S. foreign policy under the Bush Administration. Remarkably, they tend to ignore the religious core of Niebuhr's political thought: his Christian understanding of the tragedy of human nature. It was this German-born theologian, after all, who tried to reclaim the biblical doctrine of original sin during the inter-war period.

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Science is no substitute for virtue; the heart is as necessary for a good life as the head.

Bertrand Russell

Featured Trinity Forum Resource

Ex Tenebris (Audio) by Russell Kirk, foreword by Vigen Guroian.

Russell Kirk’s ghostly tale is narrated by David Schock in this 67-minute CD audio that helps us think about tradition and the role of governments and neighbors.

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Recent Articles

Blinded by Self-Interest

Obama’s Challenges Overseas

Secrets Buried in Platitudes

Manger Wetter

Aitken on McDonald in the American Spectator

Where No One Sees

A Teaching Moment

Let all mortal flesh keep silence

Odysseus and the Seduction of Leadership

Loconte on Niebuhr in Books & Culture

Gleanings Quick Links

RIP Richard John Neuhaus: First Things has posted a 2000 essay by Father Neuhaus, “Born Toward Dying,” that is well worth your time. “The worst thing is not the sorrow or the loss or the heartbreak. Worse is to be encountered by death and not to be changed by the encounter. There are pills we can take to get through the experience, but the danger is that we then do not go through the experience but around it. Traditions of wisdom encourage us to stay with death a while.” (First Things (h/t) • 2009 01 08)

Money is the new secret of a happy job: Maybe? “Over the past decade, the rich, professional classes have developed an increasingly unhealthy attitude to their jobs. We took our jobs and our fat salaries for granted and felt aggrieved if our bonuses were not even bigger than the year before. We demanded that the work be interesting in itself and, even more dangerously and preposterously, that it should have meaning.” (Lucy Kellaway, Financial Times2008 12 15)

Gee, One Bold Storm coming up….: “Oh, yes Stephen. That’s all very well, but you try being a CEO in the real world of share prices and financial officers. Bullshit. Any CEO who hides behind his shareholders isn’t worthy of their job: I’ve met enough business leaders to know that the good ones lead, they don’t follow. Isn’t that kind of what ‘leader’ means? I seem to be straying. But it’s all relevant really and it all needs saying again and again. Managers, corporates, finance people, executives in tech companies – they all need to understand for the sake of their pride and happiness as much as their success, this simple rule: ‘That’ll do’ won’t do. ‘That’s good enough’ is never good enough.” Also, a psychological insight on the success of the iPhone.  (Stephen Fry • 2008 12 10)

A biblical lesson for today’s bankers: From Spain: ‘Bringing the biblical idea up to date, Governor Ordóñez suggested financial regulators insist that banks build up their capital at an enhanced rate during prosperous years to put them in better financial shape should a serious slump follow with many boom-time loans turning sour. Actually, a predecessor of Ordóñez in the 1990s, Governor Luis Angel Roja, did just that. He put into practice a regulatory mechanism termed “dynamic provisioning.” This, notes Ordóñez, has reinforced the present stability of the Spanish banking system “and today commands wide recognition.” The biblical story indicates that economies are “unequivocally cyclical,” notes Ordóñez. Since Joseph, 4,000 years ago, “perhaps we have made some progress … it seems that the years of plenty are somewhat longer than the lean years,” he adds. “But little more than that.” ’ (Christian Science Monitor, h/t2008 12 10)

Lessons From the Great Books Generation (2008 12 07)
The Left Wing of America’s Civil Religion (2008 12 04)
Beauty of Soul: Oscar Wilde & Anton Chekhov (2008 12 02)
Children’s Books, Lost and Found (2008 11 21)
John Piper explains Why Calvinists are so Negative (2008 11 19)

more . . .

Other Resources from the Fellows

Cover image via AmazonThe Meaning of Marriage: Family, State, Market, and Morals by Jean Bethke Elshtain, et al.

A thorough discussion of the case for marriage as an intrinsically good institution.